
The Polyphonic Poetics of Watchmen by Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons and Its Ontological Implications Roy Auh, Duke University, 2016 Introduction In Russia at the end of the 1920s, a failed philosopher with a limp1 tried to make sense of the world that was becoming more kaleidoscopic with each spin of its axis. He could not count on any ideologies to anchor him about the world, on the question of what it means to be human. He lived in a time when any reliable ideological answers were collapsing left and right and nothing was safe from deconstruction2: World War I shattered any structural cornerstones in all spheres of society and knowledge: Russian Revolution dismantled the Tsarist autocracy; Arnold Schoenberg abandoned tonality in music; Albert Einstein proved the fragility of physical reality; Sigmund Freud revealed the human mind to be a misunderstood cosmos; and Gertrude Stein challenged absoluteness of denotations while James Joyce reconfigured syntax. New forms of being in all disciplines were abounding, and the world needed a new system of thought to accommodate all the different voices that were populating the world. Nonetheless, as much as his anxiety stemmed from the storm of innovations, it also came from his physical danger; he was under Stalin’s watch during the purge of intellectuals, which eventually produced his sentence to an exile in Siberia (Gogotishvili). This philosopher, Mikhail Bakhtin, however, found his answer to the uncertainty about human ontology in a literary giant that received the same criminal sentence in the previous century: Fyodor Dostoevsky. From reading his novels, Bakhtin conceptualized literary polyphony, a novelistic system that allowed subjective independence and freedom to each character’s consciousness by eliminating the author’s governing voice. The narratological revolution Bakhtin saw in Dostoevsky’s work allowed a new understanding of human ontology that reconciled the turn of the century’s pluralistic burst of perspectives and possibilities of being. Bakhtin showed that Dostoevsky’s poetics was founded on a particular ontological view that reconciled pluralism with Existentialist view of humanity. Nonetheless, by the end of twentieth century, the world only accelerated in its growing complexity by the end of twentieth century. The question animating this essay then is if Bakhtin’s theory from the 1920s is still capable of artistically reflecting the nature of reality of 1980s. In response, a work that is unexpectedly sophisticated tackled the same ontological uncertainty that Bakhtin analyzed in his works. In 1986 the United States, DC Comics picked up a no-name writer from The Boroughs, the notoriously poverty-stricken part of Northamton, England (Alan Moore Fan Site). Handed only a few washed-up, bygone superheroes to create a new miniseries, he was expected to manufacture primary-colored narratives that simplified reality into clear lines and two-dimensional faces. Instead, he brought unrestrained psychological realism to Swamp Things that shocked the comics community into witnessing the possibility of an unprecedented artistry and philosophical nuances. Then, riding the momentum of artistry, he turned to the polychromatic world of the eighties that was juggling the Cold War, globalization, new palette of identity politics, and the Internet, and produced the 1 His chronic osteomyelitis led to an amputation of his leg. 2 Characteristic in modern philosophy, deconstruction is a systematic process of reevaluating the truth-value of every premise within a belief system and reassessing the validity of its foundation, to either reaffirm its authority or discard it. This particular usage of “deconstruction” is more sympathetic to Cartesian school of thought as opposed to Derrida’s. Auh 2 groundbreaking Watchmen. Portraying this unprecedentedly cacophonous reality was a mission of the highest art forms, befitting explorations in literary environments inhabited by characters such as Kurt Vonnegut’s Billy Pilgrim, Samuel Beckett’s Pim, Gabriel Garcia Marquez’s Buendia, and Naguib Mahfouz’s Gebelaawi—not Captain America or the Fantastic Four. However, Alan Moore shattered expectations and, collaborating with a British virtuoso comics artist Dave Gibbons, produced Watchmen. This groundbreaking work solidified his celebrity as an intellectual as much as it elevated Western comic books into “graphic novels,”3 a literary genre with enough sophistication for Watchmen to be ranked in Time Magazine’s “All-TIME 100 Novels” list. Not to be outshined by its companions in that list, Watchmen is a sobering meditation on its contemporary reality, especially the disorienting and terrifying faces of human society. As Bakhtin had done, Moore also sought to get a bearing on the nauseatingly complex world through art, and, as Dostoevsky had done, consequently employed a pluralistic narrative form. However, Moore distinguished his pluralist novelistic universe from them with characters that were of a unique, postmodernist ontological composition—that reflects the fact that human complexity is not an innate human quality to be celebrated, as Dostoevsky thought, but a reflection of a complex society humans are born into. Thesis In this essay, I will show how Bakhtin analzyed Dostoevsky’s poetics as literary polyphony, a narratological environment defined by fully developed pluralism of characters’ consciousnesses, for a particular point of view on human ontology. He saw that Dostoevsky’s novelistic structure is founded on what Bakhtin coins the “unfinalizability” of man, or the infinite nature of human consciousness and its consequent resistance to any static descriptions. As poetics are founded on a basis of the author’s personal ontological opinion, so this essay will summarize how polyphonic poetics is founded on ontological basis of human unfinalizability. The second part of the essay will then analyze the different ontological justification of polyphonic poetics, specifically those advanced by Moore and Gibbons’s polyphonic graphic novel Watchmen. I will first outline the various poetical techniques Watchmen uses. I will then lay our how Watchmen’s innovations in the visual dimensions of the graphic novel add meaning and understanding to our experience of polyphony. Watchmen’s use of the graphic form for polyphonic effect thus presents a more contemporary experience of polyphonic poetics as the novel reflects a deepened kaleidoscopic uncertainty of human ontology and meaning of life. I will argue that Moore and Gibbons’ polyphony finds its philosophical inspiration in the ontological thesis that human, as an empty mirror to society, is, unfinalizable only because the society it reflects is unfinalizable. This is a revision of Bakhtin’s theory of unfinalizability he finds in Dostoevsky, and its placement in a postmodernist context: the source of human’s unfinalizability is not his or her innate consciousness, which is what Dostoevsky writes about, but the society he or she is lodged into, which I argue is what Moore and Gibbons represent. This essay is thus about an ontological shift of polyphonic poetics found in Watchmen’s graphic medium. The formalistic and philosophical revision allows the readers a more contemporary experience of literary polyphony and its ontological framework. 3 This is a label used primarily by DC Comics to market Watchmen to a wider brand of audience. It is difficult to say scholarly that Watchmen is the first ‘graphic novel’ in this aspect, as well as considering the existence of a rich tradition of sophisticated graphic novels in Asia that has been around since 1940s. Auh 3 What is Polyphony? The term literary polyphony was first introduced in 1929 in Bakhtin’s influential Problems of Dostoevsky’s Poetics. In this book, Bakhtin describes Dostoevsky’s novelistic worlds as polyphonic, antithetical to traditional “monologic” novels. In music, polyphony is a phenomenon in which multiple voices, human or instrumental, sing out different notes but harmonize on a higher musical plane. However, novelistic polyphony is a concept entirely different from its musicological counterpart. To understand what polyphonic novels are, it is paramount to know what they are not: monologic novels. In monologic novels, everything within its fictional universe happens and exists in service of the author’s personal grand narrative, or the author’s “monologue.” There is, as Bahktin writes, a “firm background of a unified world of objects” whose characters are its flat murals by being “subordinated to the character’s objectified image as merely one of its characteristics” (Bakhtin 18, 7). Monologic novels are most easily identifiable by their didacticism—the entirety of the novelistic universe is watered down into the ‘bottom line’ of the tale, a consequence of the authors standing above their fictional universe and employing their own consciousness to govern each of their characters, essentially rendering them as his or her marionettes at best. The fiction is rather an elaborate mouthpiece for the author, where his ideology and consciousness is the actual basis of each character’s words. Bakhtin claims that therefore, the novel have dominantly been single-voiced, that of the author’s singular perspective. In this monologic system, the author is raised to a deity that fated all that is according to his will. Writers of philosophical novels most often exercise this framework. For example, Voltaire’s vision is clearly outlined all throughout Candide. A quick-paced story of a prince and his tutor surviving
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